Christmas Eve is a long day for the childrenOn Christmas Eve, the families 
wake up to a new day and does the last minute house works and shopping. It's a 
stressing time where people run for their life buying the lasts presents, food 
and drinks. 
There is totally chaotic in the traffic and in shops. It looks like that 
people think there is no tomorrow. 
    
                
              
               
        
         
              
              
             
             
     The Christmas Threes are well decorated (sometimes 
overloaded) including several small lights spread around and a lightening star 
on the top. Each tenth of the Christmas Threes in Norway is so far this 
Christmas in plastic. They don`t smell or fill up the floor in the living room 
with spruce needles ("barnåler"), or more appropriate called rubbish, as 
the spruce three do. It`s fake, but anyway I will just say: Plastic 
fantastic!         
              
              
             
             
                
          Around the three there 
are plenty of presents. 
The Christmas Eve is an especially long day for children. They usually kill 
time by watching TV and sneaking around the Christmas Three in the living room 
looking for big and hard presents. Sometimes they can not stand their curiosity 
so they begin to touch the presents to get a feeling of what it could be without 
unwrapping it. If their parents see that they get very angry. 
  
  
    | 
       Photo. A Norwegian man decorates the 
      Christmas Three with his best art skills.  
      ...........but when the women begun to decorate the Christmas 
      Three, it become soon overloaded with all kind of 
      stuff.    | 
      | 
Around 4 p.m. a clock many Norwegian families go to church for making up for all 
their sins before they get their Christmas presents. Before that parents have 
prepared the fat Christmas meal which is smoked/dried ribs from a sheep and "grey 
fat sausages" and it could also be so called "pinnekjøtt" (another kind of 
cooked salted and/or smoked and dried ribs from a sheep). 
So it's time for eating and drinking. When adults drink 
the strong Norwegian alcoholic traditional Christmas drink "Akevitt", they get 
very funny and begin to sing Christmas songs. It's a big challenge for parents 
to get their children to eat with good manners and sit quite during the meal. 
The children are so excited because of all the presents around the Christmas 
three that they can't relax. They hope so deeply that Santa Claus has heard 
their wishes, but as their parents say to their children: if you not behave 
well, Santa Claus would not show up with presents to you. Santa Claus sees 
everyone and everything during the year. It just like as the famous pop group 
Police sings: Every step you take, every move you make, I will watching 
you
.             
           
              
               
             
               
              
             
               
        
After dinner and desert mum and dad clean the table. So walk around the 
Christmas Three together with the children singing traditional Christmas songs. 
At the same time the children wait eagerly for the Santa Claus. They look out 
from the windows hoping to catch a glimpse of their favourite guest. 
The real Santa Claus
As mentioned, in Norway the 
Santa Claus is called "Nissen". Actual he is the real Santa Claus in my opinion. 
One thing I am sure about is that he is much less commercial than his American 
colleague (US), who looks like a business man in disguise. 
  
  
    | 
       Photo. The real Santa Claus is from 
      Norway. 
      The Finnish claim that Santa Claus is from Finland, but he is of course 
      from Norway.  
      Anyway it's not so important where he comes from as far I got my 
      presents (well deserved???), say many.  
      The children turn very dissapointed if the get "soft" presents for 
      Christmas. They are so spoiled that the start to cry sometimes if they 
      don`t get what they want. So it`s hard to be a "NISSEMANN" - 
      Santa!  | 
      | 
My Soumi wife Sirpa is really convinced as the rest of the people from 
Finland that the real Santa Claus lives on the top of the mountain Korvatunturi 
in Lapland north in Finland. According to her, being a Santa Claus is a full 
time job over the year. In the Santa Clause Village in Rovaniemi, Finland, 
Christmas is a yearlong affair. Though Santa collects lists and delivers 
presents in a few days before Christmas, workers at the Santa Claus Operations 
(SCO) centre have to work all throughout the year, monitoring shopping trends, 
ordering gifts from manufacturers, and packing them ready for delivery. 
Santa Claus way to travelling it's something for 
itself
 The Norwegian 
Santa Claus rides on a sledge pulled by Reindeers leaded by Rudolf the Red Nose 
Reindeer. That is the fastest way to travel for him. It's much better than 
flying with SAS and British Airways. Santa comes with special presents to all children, 
sometimes also to adults. 
  
  
    | Image. Santa travels fast by reindeers. He 
      goes up and down, from house to house.  | 
      | 
  
  
    | 
       Image. Santa has a hard time squeesing in all 
      the presents in the chimney.  
      After he has landed on the house roof, he presses 
      the presents and himself down the chimney. It's not so easy for him 
      since he has a big belly, and he has also a huge sack with 
      big presents.  
      So he needs to take a break and something strong to drink.   | 
      | 
Then he is ready for the deliverance, but first he asks the children whether 
they have behaved well during the year. Sometimes it's hard for them to give an 
honest answer, but the Santa Claus is kind and don't judge them too hard. He 
enjoys giving presents to everyone to bring happiness in people's life. Isn't it 
the biggest joy to give? 
The children both love and fear Santa Claus
The children want Santa Claus 
so much to come, but at same the time some of them are afraid of him. After a 
while many of them dare to sit on his knee: but not many dare to drag his beard, 
and very few dare to lift his hat off. 
Children use mostly porridge to attract Santa to their homes. They 
set the porrigde by the entrance, and hope that Santa will show up with presents 
when he sees this. Sometimes the children also set out strong drinks for Santa, 
which is hardly recommended by their father.
Whenever children, or adults for that matter, have a 
chance to meet Santa Claus, their heads are full of questions that they want to 
ask. But the excitement of the actual moment usually makes them nervous, leaving 
them with only one question: "What was it I wanted to ask?"             
              
            
          And so the hundred questions 
go unanswered. One thing is very important to remember: make a wish for the next 
Christmas! But how many children remember that when the big man with overgrown 
hair in his face stands in front of them?
  
  
    | 
       Photo. Children become very excited when 
      Santa opened his big sack.  
      What`s in the sack? For a while they forgot to be afraid of the 
      strange man in red.  | 
      | 
Many children wonder how does Santa Claus have time to deliver all 
the presents? First of all, he is the master of logistics. He knows the "customers" 
need and wishes, he is good at planning and administration, he uses 
effective transport as Reindeers, and because of that he can deliver on time - the right product - to the right 
customer. 
But how can Santa understand what women want? It`s not easy. 
I think he has a challenge there!   
                      
              
             
                
   
Santa Claus also takes advantage of the time differences between time zones. 
When children in Norway and Finland are awake, children in China and Japan are 
asleep and vice-versa. There is also some magic involved. Sometimes Santa Claus 
may leave presents for the elves to deliver. The most important thing is that 
the gifts get there on time.
Dad likes to play with toys too
So the children get 
busy with their new toys while the grown-ups enjoy their coffee, "Pepperkaker" 
(cookies, cakes) and drinks. The children fight sometimes when their brother or 
sister take their new toys. "It's mine",    
          
            
         they 
shout. So their parents have to practise their best skills in peace negotians. 
Also their childrens` father likes to play with toys. Sometimes the children get angry on 
their fathers because they get so busy with their toys, and then the trouble 
starts. 
  After a while the children get so tired that they fell in sleep 
with their new toys in their hands, and have to be carried in to bed by their 
parents. But be sure: they stand up very early in the morning to continue playing 
with their new toys, and they make a lot of noise. It`s not popular for adults 
with Akevitt hangover who like to sleep longer, but strong coffee help them to wake 
up and clear their mind. 
The days after
On Christmas day the children 
wake up to look for more presents under the Christmas Three. Sometimes they find 
out that Santa Claus has put packages, chocolate, marzipan or fruit in their 
stockings. That it's that last sign from the Santa Claus, and the children 
understand that they have to wait another long year for the return of their 
favourite visitor. 
The first and second days of Christmas are usually spent together with family 
and relatives. The second day is the big party day for adults, also called the 
Boxing Day in Britain. After this day most people are so tired that they like to 
relax until the new year start. 
 During Christmas it's popular for people to disguise themselves with strange masks and 
costumes. Both children and adults like to do that when they visit friends and 
neighbours without getting revealed. People who do that in Norway are called julebukker 
because the look so funny (translated in to English it means "Christmas goats"). 
Sometimes it could be a real surprise for the host getting such kind 
of unexpected visitors, but mostly they take it with good humour. It's usual that 
the host gives Julebukkene something to drink and eat, for example Akevitt, Christmas Beer, 
chocolate, marzipan or fruits. 
I hope my Finnish friends and the rest of the Finnish people finally 
understand that the real Santa Claus is from Norway. Better proof could not be 
given! 
Since I like travelling, my biggest wish for a Christmas present is a tour to 
an exotic country where I can relax and reload my batteries for the next 
Christmas. 
The last words before Christmas
So it's just one 
more thing for me to say: 
Have a 
peaceful time to all of you around the world. 
Merry 
Christmas from Norway! 
I send my 
special greetings to all the Finnish: Santa Claus is definitely Norwegian! 
Come to 
Norway and you will finally meet the real Santa Claus 
too!
I will also like to send a special Christmas Greetings to the 
Iranian people. I was in your country in July this year, and you are a really 
great people. I can not think of a more friendly and hospitable people than you. 
Perhaps the real Santa Claus comes from your country 
because you are so kind and nice! 
Stein Morten Lund, 8 December 2004
Additional information
Read more about the Party 
life in Norway and Finland on our website. 
Read about Christmas parties at Johns Bar in Oslo  
More information about traditional Christmas dinners in Norway: 
A 
traditional Christmas dinner generally features roast pork ribs in Eastern 
Norway, and cod, halibut or lutefisk in the coastal districts, even though 
migration has virtually erased these culinary boundary lines. 
The time-honoured rice porridge is still served, but seldom at the main 
Christmas meal in the evening. More and more Norwegians are turning to turkey, a 
type of poultry that has not been as common here as in other countries.
Other Christmas specialities include a variety of sweet and salted 
delicacies. These are as head cheese, prepared in the Danish and German fashion, 
rather than the French, mutton roll, a similar dish made of lamb, Smoked leg of 
lamb, many different types of marinated herring, pork sausages and meatballs. 
Lutfisk - Lye fish:
Lutefisk is 
a typical Norwegian speciality and one of our oldest dinners. It has become an 
increasingly popular choice for pre-Christmas festivities. The process for 
preparing it is advanced. The fish must first be pounded with a wooden hammer 
and then soaked in water for many hours. Adding wood ash lye to the water makes 
the fish particularly soft and flavourful. With right choice of Christmas beer 
and Akevitt it gives you a unique tasteful adventure.